Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

34
Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011

Transcript of Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Page 1: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda

February 2011

Page 2: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

In 2005, at the National Education Summit on High Schools, states came together to launch the American Diploma Project Network to collectively address the expectations gap – the gap between the knowledge and skills required of students to earn a high school diploma and the knowledge and skills most demanded by first-year college courses and in the 21st century workplace.

Each year, on the anniversary of the 2005 Summit, Achieve releases a 50-state progress report on the alignment of high school policies with the demands of college and careers.

Over the past six years, states have made significant progress in the adoption of key college- and career-ready policies.

Closing the Expectations Gap

2

Page 3: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

The College- and Career-Ready AgendaKey Policy Priorities

3Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 4: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

State Progress on Adopting Policies to Ensure that High School Students Graduate College and Career Ready: 2011

4Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 5: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

In 2011, 47 States and DC Have Aligned College- and Career-Ready Standards

5

Adopted CCSS Adopted CCSS (ELA), developed by state (math)

Adopted CCSS provisionally

Developed by state

Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 6: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

20 States and DC Require a College- and Career-Ready Diploma

6Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

DC

Page 7: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

In 2011, 14 States Administer Tests Aligned with College and Career Expectations

7Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 8: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Consortia Working to Create Next-Generation Assessment Systems

8

PARCC member SBAC member PARCC and SBAC member* Governing state

Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 9: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

In 2011, 22 States Have a P-20 Data System that Match Student-level Data Annually

9Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 10: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Key College- and Career-Ready Accountability Indicators and Uses

10Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 11: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

In 2011, Only Texas Meets Accountability Criteria

11Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 12: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Emerging Best Practices in Accountability: Multiple Indicators for one Use

12

Texas: IncentivesCCR DiplomaCCR Assessment Exceeding College and Career ReadinessRemediation

Florida: Publicly Reporting CCR DiplomaCCR Assessment Exceeding College and Career ReadinessRemediation

Indiana: Publicly Reporting CCR DiplomaRemediation

Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 13: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Emerging Best Practices in Accountability: Multiple Uses for an Indicator

13

Louisiana: CCR Diploma Publicly Reporting GoalsIncentivesAccountability Formula

Kentucky: CCR AssessmentPublicly Reporting Accountability Formula

Oklahoma: Exceeding College and Career ReadinessIncentivesAccountability Formula

Virginia: CCR Diploma• Publicly Reporting

Incentives

Achieve | 2011 Closing the Expectations Gap

Page 14: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Who Supports the College- and Career-Ready Agenda?

14

The college-and career-ready agenda has now become a national policy priority as evidenced by the recent dialogue on education reform--including Race to the Top, Common Core State Standards, and common assessments.

So, while policy leaders at all levels are embracing the goal of college and career readiness for all, what does the public think?

To find out, Achieve commissioned a survey of registered voters to determine whether they support both the goal of graduating all students from high school ready for college and careers and the policies necessary to meet that goal.

Page 15: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Methodology

15

On behalf of Achieve, Public Opinion Strategies and Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research jointly conducted a national survey of N=800 registered voters between May 23-26, 2010. The poll has a margin of error of +3.5%.

The survey was conducted following the completion of ten focus groups conducted in February 2010. The groups were conducted among public high school students, public high school teachers, public educators and

parents of public high school students across five states.

Page 16: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

There is Strong Agreement that Education or Training Beyond High School is Necessary for Future Success

16

To really get ahead in life a person needs at least some education beyond high school, whether that means university, community college, technical or vocational school.

To really get ahead in life a person needs more than just a high school education.

(N=400)

87%

89%

Page 17: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

There is Strong Agreement that Rigorous Requirements in High School Are Critical

17

All students should be pushed to take rigorous and broad academic requirements in high school to make sure they have as many options as possible upon graduation.

Academic and graduation requirements in public high schools will better prepare students to take their next step in life.

Academic and graduation requirements in public high schools will better prepare students to compete in our global economy.

(N=400)

90%

82%

83%

Page 18: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

48% 50%

Voters Are Divided on Whether Students Graduate Prepared for Their Next Steps

Sub-Group Prepared Unprepared

Male 46% 52%

Female 50% 48%

18-44 55% 45%

45+ 43% 54%

Republican 46% 53%

Independent 43% 54%

Democrat 54% 45%

Less Than College 46% 52%

College + 50% 48%

States with CCR Graduation Requirements

48% 50%

States without CCR Graduation Requirements

48% 50%

Parents of High School Children or Recent Grads

46% 50%

White 47% 50%

African American 57% 42%

Generally speaking, when it comes to having sufficient academic knowledge and skills, do you believe graduates of our nation's public high schools are – very prepared, somewhat prepared, somewhat unprepared or very unprepared – to meet the expectations they face as they take the next steps after high school?

4%Very Prepared

16%Very

Unprepared

18

Page 19: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Common Standards

Given the choice, voters would prefer the same education standards be implemented across the country, rather than each state having its

own standards.

Currently, each state establishes its own education standards in subjects such as mathematics, reading, and English language skills. I am going to read you two statements, and please tell me which

comes closer to your point of view on this:

It is better for all states to have the SAME STANDARDS at each grade

level in math and English so students across the country have to

meet the same expectations.

…or…

It is better for all states to have their OWN STANDARDS at each grade level in math and English so each

state can be sure that the standards reflect their own priorities.

(N=400)

19

Page 20: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Common Assessments

Given the choice, voters would prefer the same tests be implemented across the country, rather than each state having

its own tests.

Currently, each state establishes its own education tests in subjects such as mathematics, reading, and English language skills. I am going to read you two statements, and please tell me which comes

closer to your point of view on this:

(N=400)

It is better for all states to have the SAME TESTS at each grade level in math and English so test scores can

be compared across states.

…or…

It is better for all states to have their OWN TESTS at each grade level in

math and English so each state can be sure the tests reflect their

own priorities.

20

Page 21: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Graduation Requirements

By almost a two-to-one margin, voters tell us it is better to have rigorous graduation requirements for all students, than to have different

requirements for different students.

21

It is better to implement the SAME RIGOROUS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS FOR

EVERYONE so all students are being pushed to succeed and achieve their potential.

It is better to implement HIGHER GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS FOR TOP-PERFORMING

STUDENTS and have lower requirements for students who are struggling.

Now, when it comes to setting high school graduation requirements, which statement comes closer to your point of view?

Page 22: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

College- and Career-Ready (CCR) Graduation Requirements

22

Voters heard the following information and were asked if they favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation

requirements for all students:

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four

years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra II), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social

studies (including U.S. and World History, and economics), and various electives chosen from fine

arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate.

Page 23: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

86%

14%

Sub-Group Strongly Favor Total Favor

Male 64% 87%

Female 65% 84%

18-44 63% 88%

45+ 66% 84%

White 66% 85%

African American 51% 84%

Less Than College 59% 85%

College + 71% 87%

States with CCR Graduation Requirements

62% 86%

States without CCR Graduation Requirements

67% 85%

Parents of High School Children or Recent Grads

63% 85%

Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

Favor Oppose

65%Strongly

23

There is Virtually Unanimous Support for CCR Requirements For All Students

Page 24: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

65%Strongly

24

Republicans (36%)

Democrats (38%)

Independents (23%)

Favor Favor FavorOppose Oppose Oppose

70%Strongly 65%

Strongly61%

Strongly

This Unanimous Support Exists Across Party Lines

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra TWO), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social studies (including U.S. and World History, and

economics), and various electives chosen from fine arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate. Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

Page 25: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

…And Among Parents and Non-Parents

25

Total Parents

Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose

(N=294) (N=133) (N=505)

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra TWO), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social studies (including U.S. and World History, and

economics), and various electives chosen from fine arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate. Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

Page 26: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

…And Across Ethnic/Racial Lines

26

Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor

Total By Ethnicity

(N=608) (N=96) (N=64)

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra TWO), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social studies (including U.S. and World History, and

economics), and various electives chosen from fine arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate. Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

Page 27: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

...And in Urban-Suburban-Rural Communities

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra TWO), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social studies (including U.S. and World History, and

economics), and various electives chosen from fine arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate. Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

27

Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor

Total By Geography

Oppose

(N=240) (N=419) (N=142)

Urban: A Principal City of a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) is considered Urban; Suburban: Any portion of an MSA county that is not in a Principal City is considered Suburban; Rural: All counties without a MSA are considered Rural.

Page 28: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

…And in All Regions of the Nation

Many states require that all students in public high schools complete four years of English, three or four years of math (including Algebra, Geometry and Algebra TWO), three or four years of science (including biology and chemistry), three or four years of social studies (including U.S. and World History, and

economics), and various electives chosen from fine arts, career technical, or foreign language subjects, in order to graduate. Do you favor or oppose having these kinds of high school graduation requirements for all students?

28

Favor Oppose

Total Region

(N=173) (N=177) (N=271) (N=179)

Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose Favor Oppose

Page 29: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

29

Now, actually, (NAME OF STATE) already has the high school graduation

requirements I just described. Knowing

that, and thinking some more about this…do you

believe high school graduation requirements

in (NAME OF STATE) should be...

Raised

Kept the Same

Lowered

(Asked only in states with requirements: AL, AZ, AR, DE, FL, GA, IN, KY, MI, MN, MS, NE, NM, NY, NC, OH, OK, SD, TN, TX, WA, DC. N=431)*

}

Voters in States with CCR Requirements Either Want to Keep the Requirements – Or Raise Them Further!

* Since the survey was conducted, the list of states with college- and career-ready graduation requirements in place has changed to include Utah, while New York and Washington are both in process of adopting graduation requirements at this level.

Page 30: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

30

Now, actually, (NAME OF STATE) does NOT have

all the high school graduation requirements

I just described. Knowing that, and

thinking some more about this…do you believe high school

graduation requirements in (NAME OF STATE)

should be...

Raised

Kept the Same

Lowered

}

(Asked in states that do not have requirements. N=369)

Voters in States Without CCR Requirements Would Overwhelmingly Choose to Raise Their Requirements

Page 31: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Voters are Split Over Whether Raising Academic and Graduation Requirements Would Increase the Dropout Rate

Raising academic and graduation requirements means more students will drop out of high school.

31

% Total Disagree% Total Agree

Agree

(N=400)

Disagree

Sub-Group Total Agree Total Disagree

Less Than College 57% 42%

College + 42% 58%

States with CCR Graduation Requirements 54% 46%

States without CCR Graduation Requirements 43% 56%

Page 32: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

32

Key Findings from Achieving the Possible:What Americans Think About the College- and Career-Ready Agenda

There is widespread agreement that all students need additional education and training beyond high school across voters.

Support for policies aimed to prepare high school students for college and careers is broad, deep and fully bipartisan with equally high numbers of Democratic, Republican and Independent voters supporting such reforms.

There is strong support for the specific policies that put common expectations in place for all students – including common standards, common assessments and graduation requirements.

More generally, there is near universal agreement across partisan, ethnic/racial and geographic lines that some education and training beyond high school is necessary – and that stronger expectations in high school will go a long way towards preparing students for their next steps.

Page 33: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

The Bottom Line

33

Policymakers have more support than expected around college- and career-ready policies, which bodes well for the success of the Common Core State Standards and common assessments and other college-and career-ready policies.

However, college- and career-ready policies, such as rigorous graduation requirements, are more likely to be supported if states have a system of supports and incentives in place—which are well-communicated and understood by stakeholders.

Examples of supportive policies include:

Targeted support for struggling students

Support and outreach to middle school students to help prepare them for high school.

Aligning graduation requirements with college admissions

Page 34: Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda February 2011.

Policies and Perceptions of the College- and Career-Ready Agenda